Canada: Community gardens, urban farms more than hobby spaces, report authors say

“If we really want people to be investing in community gardens and caring about community gardens, they need to know that it’s not going to be taken away on 30 days’ notice.
By Joyanne Pursaga
Winnipeg Free Press
Jun. 13, 2026
Excerpt:
The City of Winnipeg is being urged to make several changes to keep community gardens and urban farms in place longer.
A Pro Bono Students Canada report recommends encouraging mobile gardens in raised planters that can be set up temporarily on one lot and moved as needed, adding a “no-loss” principle to ensure each community garden that shuts down on city land is replaced with a nearby alternative and changing development policies to prioritize and preserve the green spaces.
Aaia Haji Hussein, one of the report’s two authors, said it’s important that community gardens are recognized as more than just spaces to pursue a hobby.
“They’re meant to address things like food security, public health, community infrastructure…. They’re a real way that communities get their food, where they spend time with one another, where they learn things,” said Haji Hussein.
She and Tiana Klippenstein produced the report as part of Pro Bono Students Canada, which provides free legal information and services to community organizations. The two authors are University of Manitoba law students.
The report recommends the city take the following actions to protect urban farms and community gardens:
— Manage land through leases for city-owned land, possibly lasting one to five years and remove the ability for land to be taken back with 30 days’ notice.
— Create low-cost annual business licences for urban farms, which would allow the city to better track them and support farmers seeking insurance or financing.
— Encourage mobile gardens in raised planters and containers that can be moved to new locations, so gardens removed to make space for land to take on a different use can continue growing.
— Follow a “no loss” principle that ensures a new community garden is added near each one on city land that shuts down.
— Update the city’s overarching development plan, OurWinnipeg 2045, to recognize community gardens as critical food infrastructure and include them in community development policies to help reduce food insecurity.
— Amend Winnipeg zoning bylaws to list community gardens as protected or prioritized uses in key zones, require redevelopment proposals to consider retaining the gardens and set minimum garden-protection timelines.
The report says the current warning period required before replacing a community garden isn’t conducive to longer-term projects, which is why longer leases are suggested.
“If we really want people to be investing in community gardens and caring about community gardens, they need to know that it’s not going to be taken away on 30 days’ notice. Just offering the longer-term leases allows people to feel more comfortable with putting their time and their effort and their money into community gardens,” said Klippenstein.
The call to focus on more “mobile gardens” reflects the fact cities must consider multiple uses for land, such as housing.
“It helps with the stability of community gardens because it ensures that even when the land is used for redevelopment… people aren’t starting from zero (with the relocated gardens),” said Klippenstein.
Haji Hussein said the series of proposed changes to OurWinnipeg aim to build on existing policies that support food access across income levels.
“They get the community involved in creating that healthy food…. It’s making sure that gardening isn’t only accessible to people who have land and backyards,” she said.
Haji Hussein hopes the variety of options helps ensure some changes can protect more gardens soon.
“We understand that there are competing interests at all times, in terms of needing affordable housing and commercial land,” she said.
Coun. Emma-Durand Wood, chairwoman of the Winnipeg Food Council, said it’s too early to say whether the council will propose recommendations from the report for city council to consider, since the report marks the “very beginning stages” of that process.
Durand-Wood (Elmwood-East Kildonan) said the food council’s co-ordinators referred all questions to her, as chairwoman, on Friday.
Coun. Brian Mayes, a former Winnipeg Food Council chairman, said the ideas are promising.
“Community gardens are an important environmental (program). We’re trying to reduce our carbon output and growing more food locally is an important part of that,” said Mayes (St. Vital).
Read the complete article here.
Source: https://cityfarmer.info/canada-community-gardens-urban-farms-more-than-hobby-spaces-report-authors-say/
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